Fluid Flow
Squeeze the end of a garden hose and the water shoots out faster. Blow across the top of a sheet of paper and it lifts. Watch a river narrow into a gorge and the current picks up. Two laws are behind all three: continuity (a narrower pipe carries the same volume per second by speeding up) and Bernoulli's equation (pressure, $\tfrac{1}{2}\rho v^2$, and $\rho g y$ sum to a constant along a streamline). The trap most students fall into is sitting right between them: faster flow does not mean higher pressure. It means lower.
Fig. 8.4.A A horizontal pipe narrows from $A_1 = 0.0100 \text{ m}^2$ to $A_2 = 0.0050 \text{ m}^2$, an area ratio of $0.5$. Continuity doubles the speed: $v_2 = 4.00 \text{ m/s}$. Bernoulli's equation then drops the pressure by $6 \text{ kPa}$ in the narrow segment, even though the fluid is moving faster.
Flow Lab · Open the sandbox →Continuity is the rule that narrowing a pipe makes the flow faster: the same volume per second has less area to pass through, so it has to speed up. Bernoulli is the rule that faster flow means lower pressure at constant height, because the kinetic term has to grow at the expense of the pressure term. Tilt the pipe downhill and a third term, $\rho g y$, joins the trade; release the fluid through a hole in the side of a tank and Bernoulli reduces to Torricelli's law, $v = \sqrt{2 g h}$. One equation, three terms, four scenes.
The work
3 ways in · any order
Lesson
Fluid Flow
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Continuity, Bernoulli at constant height, the tilt term, and Torricelli's law. A ten-scenario skill check covers the area-ratio, pressure-drop, and height-drop cases.
Diagnostic
10-item topic check
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Ten items hitting the four trap modes for fluid flow: continuity reversed, Bernoulli inverted, conservation laws applied to non-ideal flow, and a missing term in Bernoulli. Score and per-misconception flags save locally.
Targeted Practice
Drill a single misconception
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Pick a failure mode you keep missing and drill it on its own. The round is adaptive: two correct in a row clears the misconception and you move on.